Hi.
I realized I was mistaking about my deal with Everyman Chess. What should I write to them? I wanted the deal to be under Iranian jurisdiction while they wanted it under UK jurisdiction, and I should have accepted that since Iran isn't a party to the international copyright law.

You shouldn’t stand on anything split, in case it gives way under you.

"The chess-board is the world ..... the player on the other side is hidden from us ..... he never overlooks a mistake, or makes the smallest allowance for ignorance."
(He doesn't let you resign and start again, either.)

If you'd like an insightful but light-hearted read on the complexity of the English language and a history of it, I recommend the following book, a review of it can be found below. It does a very job of showing how grammatically simple English has become during its transition to modern English, and how bloody horrifying studying Olde English and its dialects is. Olde English did not have infinitives or prepositions and word order did not apply. They used to put the suffix -um on nouns, which meant 'to'. How that changed over time is too mind-boggling to go into here.